Drawing to scale means that you are either making a picture smaller or bigger because it might be to big to draw like a house so u make it smaller or really tiny like a bug so in-large it. For example: Say you have a small wallet sized picture but you want to put it on your wall You decide you want it to be 40 cm by 60 cm but it's only 4 cm by 6 cm, you put it to scale and use a grid to help keep track. Just remember this ratio for these numbers, 1:10
A line scale is a long line with regularly interval numbers. They are usually used on maps to show distance. They can have different scales (km, cm, in) and compare distances. For example, if you have a map of Canada in a textbook, a line scale in the bottom mights show that every five cm on a page represents 700km on the map.
The scale 1 cm = 2 meters is a scale of 1: 200 (1/200th scale).
60 cm is equivalent to approximately 23.6 inches. In visual terms, this length can be visualized as slightly over half the length of a standard school ruler. In everyday context, it is roughly the length of a large notebook or the width of a standard computer keyboard.
1 meter = 100cm. So, 60 cm = 60 / 100 = 0.6 meters.
Drawing to scale means that you are either making a picture smaller or bigger because it might be to big to draw like a house so u make it smaller or really tiny like a bug so in-large it. For example: Say you have a small wallet sized picture but you want to put it on your wall You decide you want it to be 40 cm by 60 cm but it's only 4 cm by 6 cm, you put it to scale and use a grid to help keep track. Just remember this ratio for these numbers, 1:10
Like a rectangle.
A line scale is a long line with regularly interval numbers. They are usually used on maps to show distance. They can have different scales (km, cm, in) and compare distances. For example, if you have a map of Canada in a textbook, a line scale in the bottom mights show that every five cm on a page represents 700km on the map.
The mm scale is used for making furniture, not the cm scale. The cm scale is not precise enough for joints. The cm scale is adequate for marketing furniture because in most cases its positioning does not need to be that precise.
The scale 1 cm = 2 meters is a scale of 1: 200 (1/200th scale).
I do not understand the question. Scale is like: 1:100 cm So 1 cm is then represented by 100 cm. I have no idea what object has a scale of 672 meters 1 boat : 672.0 meters I can't help unless you are more clear.
60 cm is equivalent to approximately 23.6 inches. In visual terms, this length can be visualized as slightly over half the length of a standard school ruler. In everyday context, it is roughly the length of a large notebook or the width of a standard computer keyboard.
1 meter = 100cm. So, 60 cm = 60 / 100 = 0.6 meters.
Convert to the same units then you can do the division: 1 ft = 30.48 cm (exactly) → 35 ft ÷ 60 cm = 35 × 30.48 cm ÷ 60 cm = 1066.8 ÷ 60 = 17.78 You can get 17 whole lengths of 60 cm and 0.78 of a 60 cm length (or 17 whole lengths of 60 cm and 46.8 cm left over)
100 cm = 1 meter 60 meters = 6000 cm
60 cubic cm
(60-cm x 60-cm x 30-cm) x (1 inch/2.54 cm)3 x (1 foot/12 inches)3 = 3.814 foot3(rounded)